Snowden stops over in Moscow en route to 'third country' with WikiLeaks help

Journalists show an iPad with the picture of Edward Snowden to passengers of a flight from Hong Kong trying to find out if Snowden was aboard the plane, in Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport, June 23, 2013. (Reuters / Sergei Karpukhin) / Reuters

Whistleblower Edward Snowden has reportedly stayed overnight at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport. The former CIA contractor, who left Hong Kong in a bid to elude extradition to the US on espionage charges, is on his way to a ‘third country’ via Russia.

Snowden is still at the airport, an unnamed source in
Sheremetyevo airport management confirmed to Interfax news
agency.

"Snowden is a transit passenger, his next flight is to Cuba,
he remains in the airport complex – where he’s supposed to be,
waiting for the next flight," the source said.

A source at Aeroflot Russian Airlines told the agency that the
whistleblower, who is accompanied by WikiLeaks representative,
Sarah Harrison, has rented a suit at the airport’s «V-Express»
Capsule Hotel.

“He arrived. But he can’t leave the terminal because he
doesn’t have a Russian visa,” the source said.

Two cars with diplomatic license plates of Ecuador – the country
named among Snowden’s possible destinations – were spotted at
Sheremetyevo airport.

WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, told Australian Sydney Morning
Herald paper that Snowden will be met by “diplomats from the
country that will be his ultimate destination” in the
airport, who’ll accompany him on a further flight to his final
destination.

Earlier on Sunday, a spokesperson from the Hong Kong government
confirmed that Edward Snowden had "legally and
voluntarily" left the country.

“Mr. Edward Snowden left Hong Kong today (June 23) on his own
accord for a third country through a lawful and normal
channel,” said the Hong Kong government in a press release.
The statement also said the documents for Snowden’s extradition
submitted by Washington “did not fully comply with the legal
requirements under Hong Kong law.”

“As the HKSAR Government has yet to have sufficient
information to process the request for a provisional warrant of
arrest, there is no legal basis to restrict Mr. Snowden from
leaving Hong Kong.”

Media reports that Snowden's passport was revoked on Saturday,
which makes it unclear how he was able to depart from Hong Kong.

US State department spokesperson, Jen Psaki, said that passport
revocation is "routine and consistent with US regulations"
towards persons with felony arrest warrants.

"Persons wanted on felony charges, such as Mr. Snowden, should
not be allowed to proceed in any further international travel,
other than is necessary to return him to the US," she
added.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov
said the Kremlin was unaware of Snowden’s plans to fly to Moscow,
and had no information of any contact between Snowden and Russian
authorities.

The arrival of Snowden in Iceland is “highly unlikely”,
the head of Icelandic prime minister’s press-service, Johannes
Skulason, told Interfax news agency, adding that the country’s
government has no information on the whistleblower's whereabouts.
According to Icelandic law, a person has to be in the country in
order to apply for political asylum there.

Citing a source close to Snowden, Russian news agency Interfax
reported that the whistleblower’s final destination will be
Venezuela with a transfer in Havana, Cuba. He will
reportedly be on flight SU150 to Havana, leaving Moscow on Monday
and then on flight V-04101 to Caracas.

“He chose such a complicated route in the hope that he would
not be arrested on the way to his final destination of
Venezuela,” the source told Interfax.

The US will seek cooperation with governments of countries where
Snowden may go, Justice Department Spokeswoman Nanda Chitre
stated on Sunday.

“We will continue to discuss this matter with Hong Kong and
pursue relevant law enforcement cooperation with other countries
where Mr. Snowden may be attempting to travel,” she said, as
cited by Reuters.

'More whistleblowers will follow'

The emergence of whistleblowers like Julian Assange, Bradley
Manning and now Edward Snowden means the world will have an
increasingly clearer view of the actual state of affairs, Pepe
Escobar, an Asia Times correspondent in Hong Kong told RT.

“Definitely, we’re going to have a collection of Assanges,
Mannings and Snowdens from now on, especially from the US tech
geeks who are extremely uncomfortable with this Orwellian
panopticon surveillance thing: not only in the US as we’ve seen
some revelations on Britain as well. It is an Anglo-American
thing. Of course everybody is involved in cyber wars, but the
forefront is the US,” Escobar argues.

Don Debar, an anti-war activist and journalist, believes that
Snowden’s actions will encourage more whistleblowers to come out.

“You have Bradley Manning and they throw him on ice, basically
naked in a cell for a couple of years and threaten him with the
death penalty. After him you have Assange and now you have
Snowden and I only hope more will come out and people will start
to listen here in the United States and do something about
it.”